Foodservice

Outside of Marketside

Mesa, Ariz., website provides sneak peek of Wal-Mart small-format store

PHOENIX -- The design of Wal-Mart 's new small-format Marketside stores, which will open in the Phoenix area in coming weeks, marks a dramatic break with the branding of the rest of Wal-Mart 's more than 3,400 low-cost U.S. stores, reported The Financial Times.

Pictures of one of the first four new 15,000-square-foot stores have appeared on the website of the city of Mesa, southeast of Phoenix, the newspaper said. The design includes a natural wood finish around the entrance and deep-purple awnings--the same color that will be used on the aprons of the staff, and on its website, www.marketside.com. The Marketside name appears in lower case green lettering, with no reference to its parent company.

The first four stores have been built in former drugstore sites, said the report. Wal-Mart has indicated that the pilot will involve up to 10 stores. It has acquired at least two other sites in the Phoenix area where it is planning to build new stores from scratch.

The new Wal-Mart stores will be competing directly with Tesco's new Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Stores Inc. small-format stores. Tesco has opened 20 stores in the Phoenix area in less than a year, with another 16 sites announced so far.

Both retailers said their formats are aimed at providing fresh and prepared foods in a convenient neighborhood location.

Unlike Fresh & Easy 's minimalist hard-discount stores, planning documents cited by the Financial Times indicate that the Marketside stores will have some foods heated and prepared on the premises, including rotisserie meats and breads.

Marketside is the first new format to be launched by Wal-Mart since it started its supermarket-sized Wal-Mart Neighborhood Market stores in 1998. It is also the first format not to use the Wal-Mart name since it created the Sam 's Club warehouse store in 1983.

Wal-Mart has projected that the pilot, if successful, could evolve to between 1,000 and 1,500 stores with more than $10 billion annual sales.

A number of other leading U.S. supermarket chains are also now testing new small-format grocery/convenience/foodservice stores, including Safeway and Supervalu. (Click here for CSP Daily News coverage of the trend.)

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a CSP member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Foodservice

Opportunities Abound With Limited-Time Offers

For success, complement existing menu offerings, consider product availability and trends, and more, experts say

Snacks & Candy

How Convenience Stores Can Improve Meat Snack, Jerky Sales

Innovation, creative retailers help spark growth in the snack segment

Technology/Services

C-Stores Headed in the Right Direction With Rewards Programs

Convenience operators are working to catch up to the success of loyalty programs in other industries

Trending

More from our partners